Led by vice president Mike Pence, a bevy of White House officials and space industry executives met Thursday at the first National Space Council since its disbandment in 1993.
“American leadership in space will be assured,” Pence said. “We will return Americans to the moon … and build the foundation we need to send Americans to Mars and beyond.”
The meeting’s opening remarks focused on moving away from the current outsourcing of manned launches, in which American astronauts go to space on Russian rockets.
“America seems have lost our edge in space,” Pence said. “Rather than lead in space, too often we’ve chosen to drift and, as we learned 60 years ago, when we drift we fall behind.”
“America must lead in space once again,” he said.
Chief executives Marillyn Hewson, Dennis Muilenburg and David Thompson — of Lockheed Martin, Boeing and Orbital ATK, respectively — each stressed a similar desire to lead the world in space exploration. None of the CEOs reiterated Pence’s statement that America is behind in space leadership.
“We have proven that U.S. ventures in space lead to broad societal benefits that lift our national economy,” Hewson said.
Muilenburg joined Hewson in emphasizing the space industry’s role in the U.S. economy. He said Boeing is “America’s largest manufacturing exporter” and believes that accomplishments in space “can unite a nation.” With Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner in development as a part of the NASA commercial crew program, Muilenburg noted that continued and similar efforts require monetary support.
“It is important we have long term stability on funding,” Muilenburg said.
The immediacy of putting American astronauts on the moon using the vehicles of these companies is a matter of a few years, Thompson said.
“U.S. astronauts can carry out several cislunar voyages in the next five years,” Thompson said.
In separate panel of executives Pence called “the entrepreneurial side of space,” President and COO of SpaceX Gwynne Shotwell further backed the strides taken by U.S. companies already, saying America “is out-innovating the rest of the world.”
Pence said America “will win the 21st century in space.” He identified the council as a way to build a coherent vision for U.S. policy and strategy in space.
“There is nothing more inspiring than the country’s space program,” Muilenburg added.
Source: Tech CNBC
'American leadership in space will be assured,' VP Mike Pence says at National Space Council